Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Emergency 9: Fantasy golf advice from Round 1 of the WGC-Mexico Chammpionship

Emergency 9: Fantasy golf advice from Round 1 of the WGC-Mexico Chammpionship

Here are nine tidbits from the first round of the World Golf Championship-Mexico Championship at the Club de Golf Chapultepec outside Mexico City that gamers can use tomorrow, this weekend or down the road. Be looking for the Emergency 9 shortly after the close of play of each round of the tournament. Know Thy Enemy These were the top-10 picked golfers in the PGA TOUR Fantasy Golf presented by SERVPRO. As expected with a deep field there is plenty of separation throughout the top 10. There was more separation out of the top 10 as pick No. 11 was Thomas Pieters. He garnered only 15.6 percent of the action, another large gap between gamers’ choices. As always in this format, substitutions are allowed, so you better guess who’s going to turn it up tomorrow! People’s Choice Playing at Par-71 and stretching 7,345 yards, Club de Golf Chapultepec was kind to Tommy Fleetwood last year as he finished second to Dustin Johnson by one shot. Fleetwood was a massive selection this week as his ball-striking is fantastic and he picked up T4 last week at The Honda Classic. Gamers will need to remind themselves that his opening round 72 (+1) is just that, his opening round. With no cut this week he has plenty of time to find his iron game that let him down today as he found only 11 of 18 GIR. That will be corrected tomorrow so he stays in my lineup. Leader Louis South African Louis Oosthuizen blitzed the field with a bogey-free 64, his lowest round ever in a WGC event.  Buoyed by nine fairways and 15 GIR, Oosthuizen only needed 24 putts to set the target for Friday. After sitting just five off the lead entering Sunday at The Honda Classic, his final round 75 didn’t inspire (T24). He mentioned on television after his round today that he’s glad there’s not a Bear Trap this week! 21 and Up Shubhankar Sharma kicked the door open in December as he won the Joburg Open. The spotlight found the 21-year old Indian player again in February as he won the second time in three months at the Maybank Championship in Malaysia. He closed out that win posting 62 in the final round so there was nothing fluky about that. Playing in his first WGC event and first PGA TOUR event hasn’t seemed to bother him, yet. His opening round saw him lead the field in strokes-gained: tee-to-green and T1 in scrambling (six up-and-downs). He added a bogey-free card with an eagle and four birdies for 65 (-6) for T2. Chris Cross Englishman Chris Paisley drew attention to gamers before the week because of his form all over the world in 2018. He opened 2018 by winning the BMW Open in South Africa for his first on the European Tour. He backed up that performance in the Middle East desert with a T5 in Abu Dhabi and a fifth-place check in Dubai. There was no chance T27 in Malaysia was going to slow this train down! After taking three weeks off he showed he was sharp and fresh today as he circled seven birdies against one par (65) to sit T2. Defending Champ Dustin Johnson missed 16 putts inside 10 feet last year and won by a shot. Round 1 saw him rank sixth in strokes-gained: putting but he hit it all over the map. He found a way to circle six birdies as he overpowered the course as usual but a pair of bogeys and a sloppy double stalled out his round at 69 and T13. I’ll lean on his ball-striking to return tomorrow and for him to make a dash up the leaderboard. Montana Rusa A quick Google search for roller coaster in Spanish turned up “montana rusa”. Bubba Watson stuck gamers on some ride in the opening round.  The champion at the Genesis Open in his last time out started seven-under-par thru his first 11 holes. He followed that with a three-hole stretch of bogey, double bogey and bogey to suck the air out of his round. He added one more bogey before signing for 69 (-2) and T13.  Worry? Who Me? After Gary Woodland’s playoff win in Scottsdale many gamers thought he would be ready for THE season. Since his win he’s posted MC at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am and MC last week at The Honda Classic. His opening round of 74 saw him beat just five players. … Paul Casey closed 67-66 last year to rally for T16. His opening round 73 is one better than his 74 from last year so I’m going to be patient, again. Study Hall The field was reduced to 64 people as American Chan Kim WD before teeing it up, citing a wrist injury. He must be really injured to pass up a no-cut event with a guaranteed payday! Adjust your lineup accordingly. … Pat Perez turned 42 today and gave himself a present as he signed for 68 (-3). … The four bogey-free rounds recorded in Round 1 all ended up T5 or better: Oosthuizen (1st), Shubhankar Sharma (T2), Xander Schauffele (T2) and Rafael Cabrera-Bello (T5). … Watson (T13), Paisley (T2) and Sergio Garcia (T8) led the field with seven birdies each.

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Major Specials 2025
Type: To Win A Major 2025 - Status: OPEN
Bryson DeChambeau+500
Jon Rahm+750
Collin Morikawa+900
Xander Schauffele+900
Ludvig Aberg+1000
Justin Thomas+1100
Joaquin Niemann+1400
Shane Lowry+1600
Tommy Fleetwood+1800
Tyrrell Hatton+1800
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US Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+275
Rory McIlroy+650
Bryson DeChambeau+700
Jon Rahm+1200
Xander Schauffele+2000
Ludvig Aberg+2200
Collin Morikawa+2500
Justin Thomas+3000
Joaquin Niemann+3500
Shane Lowry+3500
Click here for more...
The Open 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
Scottie Scheffler+400
Rory McIlroy+500
Xander Schauffele+1200
Ludvig Aberg+1400
Collin Morikawa+1600
Jon Rahm+1600
Bryson DeChambeau+2000
Shane Lowry+2500
Tommy Fleetwood+2500
Tyrrell Hatton+2500
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Ryder Cup 2025
Type: Winner - Status: OPEN
USA-150
Europe+140
Tie+1200

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Sleeper Picks: THE CJ CUP @ NINE BRIDGESSleeper Picks: THE CJ CUP @ NINE BRIDGES

Ryan Palmer … There are some guys for whom the inviting fairways and greens of Nine Bridges would neutralize strengths, and then there are others for whom it reinforces the same skill set because they’ve learned how to capitalize. Forever known as a talent whose success is fortified by his game off the tee, the 43-year-old falls into the latter category. A closing 62 in his debut here last year not only established the competitive course record, it also lifted him into a share of third place. He scored progressively lower in every round. This is just his second start of 2019-20 after he dusted off a little rust with a T37 at TPC Summerlin where he nonetheless ranked 10th in total driving and landed three-quarters of the greens in regulation. Joel Dahmen … A repeat performance throughout his bag that yielded a T9 at the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open two weeks ago will do, thank you. He was inside the top 10 in total driving, greens in regulation, proximity to the hole, Strokes Gained: Tee-to-Green and par-4 scoring. He also ranked 19th in putting: birdies-or-better. Placed T29 in his debut at Nine Bridges last year. Brian Stuard … He’s played well on islands and in the tropics throughout his career, so the veteran always pinged the radar in an event like THE CJ CUP @ NINE BRIDGES. Now he arrives for his second appearance (T52, 2018) with the experience of the course piggybacking terrific current form. Finished T17 at Silverado and T4 at TPC Summerlin in his last two starts. Wrapped the 2018-19 season inside the top 15 on the PGA TOUR in fairways hit, proximity to the hole and scrambling, and he’s opened the new season sustaining those strengths while hitting more greens in regulation relative to most of the competition. Adam Schenk … The 27-year-old continues to piece together imbalanced efforts despite long-range analytics that suggest otherwise. His latest at the Shriners resulted in a T18 during which he scored in the 60s throughout and did everything well on the surface. Digging a little deeper, and despite ranking T8 in scoring opportunities and fifth in conversion percentage inside 10 feet, he was 68th in connecting for par breakers with the putter. This was due primarily to him finishing 63rd in proximity on approach. As it concerns this week, the large greens will allow him to be aggressive as he works on improving his precision. Kyongjun Moon … He’s 37 years of age, he has one win on his native KPGA and he’s a career-best 356th in the Official World Golf Ranking. He’s also never competed in a PGA TOUR-sanctioned event, but he’s in the field as one of five designated golfers representing his circuit. Fresh off a T2 at the Genesis Championship (where Sungjae Im prevailed by two strokes) – one of seven top 10s on the season – he’s seventh on the KPGA in earnings, third in greens in regulation and No. 1 in scoring average. NOTE: Sleeper is a relative term, so Rob uses unofficial criteria to determine who qualifies. Each of the following usually is determined to be ineligible for this weekly staple: Winners of the tournament on the current host course; winners in the same season; recent major champions; top 50 in the Official World Golf Ranking; recent participants of team competitions.

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Thomas sets U.S. Open recordThomas sets U.S. Open record

ERIN, Wis. – Erin Hills may have been formed thousands of years ago by glaciers that plowed through the Wisconsin heartland, but the course was deconstructed Saturday by a kinetic wunderkind yielding space-age technology. Justin Thomas, all 5-foot-10 and 160 pounds of him, didn’t even need the longest club in his bag to bludgeon the closing holes of this 7,818-yard course. His 9-under 63, which set the record for lowest score in relation to par at a U.S. Open, will be remembered for three 3-wood shots he hit on the back nine Saturday. He drove the 288-yard, par-4 15th with that fairway wood (but missed the 6-foot eagle putt), then hit that same club twice to carry his ball onto the green of the 667-yard, par-5 18th. He stood in the final fairway, debating between hooking a 2-iron into the green or hitting a high, cut 3-wood. He settled on the 3-wood because a mishit would leave him an easier recovery shot. The fans cheered when he cast aside the iron in favor of the lumber. 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